Propofol anesthesia significantly attenuated heart rate response to atropine 20 μg/kg, with only 13% (high dose) and 43% (low dose) achieving a >20 bpm increase vs 100% of controls (P<0.05).
Does propofol anesthesia attenuate the heart rate response to intravenous atropine?
Propofol anesthesia significantly attenuates the heart rate response to intravenous atropine, which cannot be effectively overcome by large doses of atropine.
Absolute Event Rate: 13% vs 100%
p-value: p=<0.05
We studied the dose-response relationships for atropine-induced heart rate (HR) changes in 61 patients during propofol anesthesia. The control group (n = 15) received no propofol. Group P-5 (n = 22) received IV propofol 1.25 mg/kg over 1 min followed by propofol at 5 mg · kg−1 · h−1. After tracheal intubation, anesthesia was maintained with propofol 5 mg · kg−1 · h−1 and 67% nitrous oxide in oxygen. Group P-10 (n = 24) received IV propofol 2.5 mg/kg over 1 min followed by propofol at 10 mg · kg−1 · h−1. The P-10 protocol was otherwise identical. All patients received incremental doses of IV atropine 5 μg/kg over 5 s at 2-min intervals until HR increased >20 bpm from baseline values. Heart rate response to atropine 10 μg/kg was attenuated in Groups P-5 (12 ± 7 bpm) and P-10 (9 ± 6 bpm) compared with the control group (28 ± 13 bpm, P 20 bpm in all patients of the control group, but in only 43% and 13% of patients in Groups P-5 and P-10, respectively (P <0.05). These results indicate the decreased HR responsiveness to IV atropine in patients receiving propofol, which cannot be effectively overcome by a large dose of atropine, is possibly attributable to propofol-induced suppression of the sympathetic nervous system.
Horiguchi et al. (Thu,) conducted a other in Propofol anesthesia (n=61). Propofol vs. No propofol was evaluated on Heart rate increase >20 bpm after atropine 20 μg/kg (p=<0.05). Propofol anesthesia significantly attenuated heart rate response to atropine 20 μg/kg, with only 13% (high dose) and 43% (low dose) achieving a >20 bpm increase vs 100% of controls (P<0.05).